Wallabies player ratings: Wright's rocks and diamonds nature leave 15 jersey open for RWC, winger's perfect night

By Christy Doran / Editor

Not for the first time little moments came back to bite hard for the Wallabies.

Ecstasy one moment, agony the next.

Mark Nawaqanitawase looked to have sealed a stunning come-from-behind victory for the Wallabies, but the inability to secure the next kick restart, just like in 2017 during their Dunedin heartbreak, saw Argentina get the chance to hit back immediately.

They did, as a clumsy Quade Cooper high shot allowed Argentina to kick deep and surge for the line. They didn’t need a second invitation.

While the heartbreaking loss puts the pressure firmly on Eddie Jones to turn the side around ahead of a daunting two-Test Bledisloe series against the All Blacks, some players advanced their World Cup claims while others hurt their chances.

Here is how the Wallabies rated in Parramatta, as Argentina won 34-31.

Tom Wright had another mixed night after two crucial errors late in the Wallabies’ loss to Argentina at CommBank Stadium on July 15, 2023 in Sydney. (Photo by Scott Gardiner/Getty Images)

Tom Wright – 4

For 60 minutes Tom Wright played his part in the Wallabies staying in the fight.

His trysaver in the 44th minute on Rodrigo Isgro was a cracker.

But two moments later in the Test didn’t help his rocks and diamonds reputation, leaving the fullback jersey wide open ahead of the World Cup.

A knock-on from a tricky grubber in behind should have been cleaned up in the 67th minute. It wasn’t, and Mateo Carreras burned Dave Porecki moments later.

Then his audacious decision to run the ball back, dummy and then throw a terribly difficult pass to Carter Gordon in the 74th minute that was spilt was his second big blunder in less than 10 minutes.

Mark Nawaqanitawase – 9.5

Brilliant. Absolute fantastic from start to finish.

Recalled for Suliasi Vunivalu, Nawaqanitawase was electric and was the Wallabies’ best.

He started the Wallabies’ night by playing on quickly from a penalty. His quick thinking put the Wallabies on the front foot as he linked up well with Tom Wright. One phase later, the Wallabies scored as Fraser McReight saw space, found Cooper who sent it wide to Samu Kerevi and Len Ikitau scored.

Then he showed his roving ability, hunting for work in the 11th minute. It led to a penalty. The Wallabies led 10-0.

Nawaqanitawase then played his part in the lead up to Kerevi’s try, putting Koroibete away in the 72nd minute.

His intercept try then put the cherry on top of a phenomenal night.

The right-winger also showed his aerial prowess throughout the night, often giving the Wallabies possession from kick restarts.

Mark Nawaqanitawase was the Wallabies’ best against Argentina. (Photo by Scott Gardiner/Getty Images)

Len Ikitau – 5

Burned in the first minute by Lucio Cinti’s left foot, Ikitau then was faultless before he was forced off in the 18th minute with a fractured scapula.

He scored the Wallabies’ first try in the fifth minute, before making a couple of good reads in defence (ninth and 16th minutes).

Samu Kerevi – 7.5

Got the Wallabies on the front-foot all night with his powerful frame.

He showed his tackle-shredding ability in the 13th minute, as he got on the outside of his man and linked up with Koroibete.

He also showed his defensive ability in the 13th minute by making a trysaving tackle.

Of course his try in the 72nd minute got the Wallabies back into the Test.

Kerevi’s strong work in the midfield provided the Wallabies what they were missing in Pretoria, a person able to straighten the line and get them over the gain line.

Marika Koroibete – 6.5

Strong on both sides of the ball, Koroibete didn’t put a foot wrong.

His decision to run the ball back in the 65th minute was a good one, as he beat the first defender and popped well off the deck to get the Wallabies on the front foot.

Then his ball back on the inside to Cooper in the lead up to Kerevi’s try was perfect.

Defensively Koroibete was excellent.

Quade Cooper – 6.5

One moment of frustration, as Cooper’s right-arm caught Pablo Matera high and led to Argentina kicking for the corner.

However, for the most part, the playmaker was very good.

His ball to Kerevi led to the opening try, while Cooper was faultless from the kicking tee and landed a couple from out wide.

Cooper also set up Kerevi’s try by supporting well and popping well off the deck.

Nic White – 6.5

Scored in the 53rd to justify James Slipper’s decision to elect for a scrum centre field.

The halfback was solid during his 65-minute effort.

Rob Valetini rolled up the sleeves against Argentina. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Rob Valetini – 7.5

One of the Wallabies’ most physical forwards, Valetini regularly got the home side over the gain line. He also topped the tackle count (22).

Fraser McReight – 6.5

Called in for the injured Michael Hooper, McReight was busy on both sides of the ball.

McReight made 19 tackles before being replaced after 65 minutes – at that point he led the tackle count.

McReight regularly slowed the ball down but wasn’t able to get a genuine steal.

Nonetheless, this was a reasonable display that won’t have done his World Cup chances any harm.

Really good opening 20 minutes defensively; ball to Cooper ahead of try. Putting pressure on ball despite not stealing it.  

Jed Holloway – 5.5

Effective at the lineout, Holloway helped shore up the set-piece.

It was a reasonable display, but the blindside position remains up for debate.

While Holloway was solid, the performances of Shannon Frizell and Matera, who offered plenty of sting on both sides of the ball and a breakdown threat, revealed what Jones is hunting.

Will Skelton – 6.5

We’re starting to see what Skelton can offer, but Jones needs more, particularly with ball-in-hand.

That will come when the Wallabies start to speed up their ruck speed and hang onto the ball. But the Wallabies need more than 38 per cent possession.

Skelton showed his worth at the maul in the fifth minute and later got on the ball in the ninth minute to win a breakdown penalty.

He was also used at the lineout in the 10th minute.

Skelton was also penalised in the 23rd minute for swimming up the side of the maul.

Richie Arnold – 5

Shown a yellow card in the 40th minute for not rolling away, the moment proved costly for the Wallabies.

Nonetheless, the Toulouse-based lock was strong at the lineout and busy whilst on the field. He made 14 tackles.

Allan Alaalatoa gave away two penalties but was powerful up front, particularly at the scrum. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Allan Alaalatoa – 6.5

Strong at the scrum all night and busy on both sides of the ball, Alaalatoa made 19 tackles.

But his work at the scrum was what stood out.

There was also a breakdown steal in the 15th minute. But not for the first time in the night, Argentina stole the ball back as no one was there quick enough to secure the ball.

Alaalatoa’s rating went down because he gave away penalties in the 19th minute (losing feet at breakdown) and 30th (jersey pull).

A poor short ball to Porecki was also spilt in the 63rd minute.

Nonetheless, much better display.

Dave Porecki – 6

Porecki’s core work at the lineout and scrum was strong, but Porecki was beaten by his opposite Julian Montoya across the park.

He did, however, fail to release at the rolling maul late in the first half when the Wallabies were surging for the line.

One stolen lineout in the 58th minute.

The big moment came when Porecki fell off Carreras in 69th minute, which saw Argentina open up a 10-point lead.

That said, Jones’ lack of trust in Jordan Uelese and the big minutes played by the hooker likely contributed to him falling off the tackle.

Porecki made 20 tackles.

James Slipper (c) – 6

Penalised once at the scrum in the 23rd minute for putting a knee on the ground, Slipper was generally excellent at the set-piece and in defence. There were a couple of top one-one-one tackles.

Jones replaced him at the right time in the 64th minute with Angus Bell making an impact.

Reserves

Jordan Uelese – N/R

Came on in the 70th minute following Porecki’s missed tackle.

Uelese’s core skills weren’t shown because the Wallabies didn’t have a lineout when he was on. Nor were they tested at the scrum.

Angus Bell – 6.5

Great impact after coming on after 64 minute.

His barnstorming run in the 74th minute was a cracker, as he burst onto a Tate McDermott ball and made 18 metres up to halfway.

Pone Fa’amausili – N/R

Came on late for Alaalatoa.

Matt Philip – 5.5

Came on after 55 minutes and was busy on both sides of the ball.

Rob Leota – 6

After being brought on in the 55th minute, Leota offered strong impact with ball-in-hand.

Josh Kemeny – 4.5

Came on after 66 minutes. Busy cameo, where the Rebels back-rower made five tackles. Unfortunately, Juan Martin Gonzalez managed to squeeze past him on the try line to score.

Carter Gordon held his own despite playing in the unfamiliar position of inside centre for 62 minutes. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Tate McDermott – 5.5

Another good cameo coming on for Nic White in the 66th minute. McDermott’s service was strong.

Carter Gordon – 7

Forced to come on after 18 minutes in the unfamiliar position of inside centre, Gordon was strong on both sides of the ball during his 62-minute outing.

Defensively Gordon was outstanding. That won’t surprise anyone who watched him throughout Super Rugby, but the playmaker brought the required physicality and one-on-one defensive ability to hold his own at inside centre.

Of course there were a couple of teething issues, but given the reshuffled backline, Gordon did a good job.

He almost had a try in the 31st minute after a great pick up off the deck, as he pounced on the loose ball and ran 55 metres before being hunted down by Cinti.

He also prevented a try in the 39th minute after Argentina broke through out wide.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-17T21:30:55+00:00

lilzot

Roar Rookie


The problem with Peyper is that he is unfit. He is not biased , but he blows the whistle as soon as he is fatigued, frustrating both sides .

2023-07-17T09:15:34+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


I like Campbell but he missed 6 tackles in one game and he is still missing tackles at SR level. That is difficult to overlook but I would be over the moon if he proved me wrong. I still think he is a 10 and would have loved to seen him moved there a few seasons ago but unfortunately it might be to late now. I feel us bring older players back as first choice players has hurt us at 10. Kellaway bad game is another’s good game in my books.

2023-07-17T08:55:18+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


Did he say that or you that they were both only 75% fit body and ability.. that will save me calling eddie

2023-07-17T08:54:46+00:00

humesy

Roar Rookie


There are just too many penalties, every game. And way too many that are arbitrary and not understood by the spectators and often the players. Who wants a game that depends on the players’ ability to predict / interpret an individual referee’s tendencies? Scrum penalties have become ridiculous. They don’t even get explained anymore, either verbally or with a signal. Then throw in a TMO who often wants to intervene, unnecessarily. People want a game they understand, makes sense and isn’t constantly interrupted. Nearly every union test these days involves post-game discussions, debates and complaints about the refs. Especially the close ones, where inevitably, one side will feel hard done by with least a few 50/50 or pedantic calls.

2023-07-17T08:20:35+00:00

John Ferguson

Expert


Gonna have to ask Eddie that one Wig. But my guess is that they are both coming back from lengthy injury lay-offs and both haven;t played more than two full games since mid-last year, that may be it.

2023-07-17T08:05:59+00:00

Android-angler Cartman-brah

Roar Rookie


Nah was just fooling and see if anyone would pick it up. I know George Smith and George Gregan and Michael Lynach fairly well.

2023-07-17T07:58:58+00:00

Loosey

Roar Rookie


The referees strictly adhere to the ‘box of chocolates’ style of refereeing. Pull out out penalty, you never know what you’re going to get. With the not rolling away example, there are times when players are clearly not doing enough to get away from the ruck, a la lazy running. Other times, the opposition are blatantly lying on top of them to prevent them rolling and looking for the whistle. The players only have themselves to blame, they have to learn and learn quick how each referee is going to interpret the laws on any given day. Surely the teams get a talk from the ref in the days leading up the match?

2023-07-17T07:00:35+00:00

Captain 15

Roar Rookie


Hi Christy, Has anyone done the statistics for when Jaco Peyper has officiated Australian Super rugby teams and Wallabies?? I honestly cannot ever remember those side’s winning?? I know that this is not a blame the referee blog but I would just like to know how many games he has refereed (remember we always got SA refs within SA to cover costs) . We can all remember Egon with the Rebels v Stomers!!?? Can anyone assist Kind regards Tony

2023-07-17T06:06:27+00:00

humesy

Roar Rookie


Yep. That too. The other thing that shts me is players getting penalised for not rolling away when they are burried under bodies. It's obvious they can't but the imperative seems to be give the attacking team a penalty, whatever the reason. I am not talking about Arnold's carding. That was pretty blatant. There was 1 in the second half that had no effect on the play and the player (can't remember who) was powerless to prevent. Ref got to have his say though and that seems to be what matters. Not saying we was robbed. Just saying the game is going to sht because of the obsessive desire to rule strictly to the over-complicated rule book.

2023-07-17T04:29:20+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


hahahaha good point.

2023-07-17T04:13:36+00:00

Qualify

Roar Rookie


Yeah, I’ve been saying it for too long now, byt Kellaway has never had a bad game in a wallaby jersey and didn’t deserve to be usurped by Wright. I know he was injured but because he isn’t a flashy player it probably would’ve happened regardless. Anyway, I see he’s fit now. So let’s see what Jones does. Campbell imo didn’t have a bad EOYT. He missed that tackle against France (which was Wright’s mess in the first place) and then everybody called for the axe. Hoping he’ll develop under the new coach as well!

2023-07-17T04:12:47+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


I've watched a lot of JC and also a LOT of TW and TW is the worst player on the field.

2023-07-17T03:47:15+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Kellaway when fit I think might steal the 15 jersey. I just want Kellaway in the team as he is a smart footballer. I think it would be a risky move and a brave move of EJ to give Campbell another go given how bad he went in the NH tour and he has had a mixed SR this year. I am hoping the new Reds coach shifts Campbell to 10. We need to do something at Hooker. It has been a problem for so long now.

2023-07-17T03:03:49+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


The thought of Valetini getting injured just stressed me out!

2023-07-17T02:59:32+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Hardly. We simply don't have options at 15. Lots of whinging but no solution.

2023-07-17T02:56:04+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Thank goodness. I’d missed this

2023-07-17T02:55:42+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Did you see Jock’s form against Tonga? And you’re still saying this?

2023-07-17T02:53:46+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I thought they were looking at that, decided it was fine, and then pinged Cooper

2023-07-17T02:50:45+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Bell?

2023-07-17T02:25:00+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


He didn't slip. The Arg TH prop turned in almost 90 degrees and Slipper had nothing to push against. Clear penalty to Aus for boring in by Arg. Peyper got it wrong.

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